MADISON, Wis. – A radio station is raising money with its own take on the war on terrorism, a fund-raiser they're calling: "Shoot bin Laden for Charity."

More than 100 Madison-area handgun owners paid between $2.50 for 15 minutes and $4 for 30 minutes to shoot at a photo of Osama bin Laden's face Thursday evening at the Deerfield Pistol and Archery Center in Deerfield.

The proceeds, $700 so far, go to aid families of Wisconsin police officers killed in the line of duty.

"The whole point wasn't to raise a lot of money ... but to create some awareness and good will toward police officers and firefighters," said John Sylvester, a local radio talk show host.

Rachel Carroll and Matthew Todd, both from Madison, said they came to practice shooting and have some fun.

"We're just letting off steam," Carroll said.

ROCKVILLE, Utah – A man who lives near a cliff got a rude awakening when a five-ton boulder made a beeline for his house.

Jack Burns, 44, was asleep in his bedroom when the boulder broke loose from the cliff Thursday morning. It crushed his bathroom and living room and leveled a bedroom wall, leaving Burns only a narrow path to escape.

"Jack said he heard the glass shatter and then he was buried," said deputy Kurt Wright of the Washington County sheriff's office. "He crawled out of bed and went out of the house by a window."

Neighbor Jeff Ballard said he went to investigate after hearing the boulder rumble down the cliff.

"There was a lot of dust in the air," he said. "You couldn't see the house and I saw a big rock near the house. I hollered for Jack and I found him just huddled up in a corner outside."

Ballard said he helped rescue Burns' brown Labrador retriever, Chaco.

Burns said the home is insured, but there are 15 exceptions in the policy, including earth movement. The policy does, however, cover falling objects.

FORREST CITY, Ark. – A man wearing high heels and a dress tried to rob a bank at gunpoint but bolted when a teller told him she didn't have any money in her cash drawer.

Local police and the FBI say the man flashed a handgun and demanded cash at the First National Bank of Eastern Arkansas early Thursday afternoon.

Officers say the would-be robber turned and ran out of the bank when the teller said she had no money to give him. No shots were fired and no one was injured, officers said.

EAST CLEVELAND, Ohio – A city councilman wants to take the sag out of baggy pants by fining offenders who don't hike up their trousers.

Councilman Nathaniel Martin has been trying to get his proposal before the council for the past month, but he said it's in limbo "because the city law director doesn't think it can be enforced."

Members of the nonprofit organization Black on Black 2000 has raised concern about young men wearing their pants so low that, in some cases, they fully expose underwear-clad backsides.

The proposed law would impose a $25 fine for a first offense and a $50 fine for a second offense.

Art McKoy, director of Black on Black, said the organization isn't trying to play the role of moral and fashion police. But he added, "Some of us black men are tired of seeing our women frown, looking the other way in disgust."

Vicki Harlston, a Shaw High School junior, agrees, adding that it "sets a bad example for kids to see guys with their pants hanging down to their knees."